The coronavirus is wreaking havoc in small towns and cities across America. Once again, the federal government ignored citizens living outside the big cities. The $3 trillion in coronavirus aid isn’t heading to hometown America, but to large municipalities.
The coronavirus is wreaking havoc in small towns and cities across America. Once again, the federal government ignored citizens living outside the big cities. The $3 trillion in coronavirus aid isn’t heading to hometown America, but to large municipalities.
Direct relief was targeted only to communities of 500,000 people or more. That leaves out a lot of Americans.
Congress can provide some relief — if the political world cares to show that smaller cities and towns matter. A bipartisan Senate bill would send dollars to smaller communities cut out of funding through the already existing coronavirus relief law — ironically called the CARES Act, which provides relief only to large metropolitan areas.
The State and Municipal Aid for Recovery and Transition, or SMART, Act would extend $500 billion in coronavirus relief to smaller cities, towns and counties. Congress must act quickly; the coronavirus brought sudden disaster to communities across America. That on top of the struggles many communities in middle America already face, from high unemployment rates to dealing with the opioid crisis.
Many towns rely on income from a large festival or two every year that draws tourists into town — those events are canceled. Local mom-and-pop motels face ruin with those cancellations that filled rooms for days or a week.
The United States Conference of Mayors has compiled a database of the stunning impacts of the coronavirus crisis on cities across America. Budget cuts, layoffs and furloughs, shutdowns of public services, cancellation of repairs. Before the advent of the coronavirus, thousands of small towns were struggling through the postindustrial era, barely making ends meet. Now the prospect for the future is bleak with the actual or effective bankruptcy of cities, towns and counties. Threatened are essential everyday services — from fixing a broken water main to repairing a pothole.
Recovery funds must be provided to the many cities and counties not covered by the provisions of existing virus aid legislation. Congress must provide some relief to Middle America. Passing the SMART Act would be a start.
— Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
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